Teapot
Dateca. 1735
OriginAsia, China, Jingdezhen
MediumHard-paste porcelain
DimensionsHeight: 5 1/8 inches
Credit LineGift of Murray F. Nimmo
Object number2013-143,A&B
DescriptionPear shaped Chinese porcelain teapot molded with peony petals and decorated with translucent enamels and gilding. Three small geese are painted on each side. Period replaced silver spout, mount for its mended lid, and chain. Label TextJust as dishes do today, 18th-century ones broke through use and carelessness. Historic repairs are found on Chinese porcelain. Valued for its beauty and its exotic connection with Asia, Chinese porcelain was kept and handed down, even when mended. Examples of period inventories include objects like those left to the next generation by General Thomas Nelson: “three blue and white china bowls, not sound, three enameled china bowls, one cracked.” Repairs were made with a variety of materials, including glue, wire or metal rivets, and even pieces of other dishes. Metalsmiths frequently doubled as china menders. Repairs often served a dual purpose, extending the life of an object while increasing its value, as seen in this teapot fitted with a silver spout, a mount for its mended lid, and a chain.
ProvenanceMurray F. Nimmo
Exhibition(s)
ca. 1760
1760-1780
1700-1720
1740-1760
ca. 1750
ca. 1735
1660-1722
ca. 1735
1765-1780
ca. 1800
ca. 1765
Ca. 1760